Monday, 4 May 2009

Saturday's thoughts

As I sat in Canterbury high street, it seemed to me that the city had lost itself.

I had walked through the clinical Whitefriars and down the high street and it just didn't seem to have that 'mystery' factor that made it different to other cities.

But I was to be proved wrong, and right, in one go.

I found a seat under a large tree near cafe rouge and read the paper. Soon people sat next to me. I can't remember most of them specifically, but they sat there.

A man then stood in front of me for quite some time. Then a little boy came up with another child, and a woman, perhaps his mother. The boy said to the man - who the family clearly knew "can I have an ice cream?"! "What's the special word?" came the inevitable reply, "please" the boy said.

And then, "you're looking smart today..." the boy looked at the man and waited.

I smiled, as did his mum and the man.

"He's learning quickly" she said and laughed.

It was nice to see some humour in the world; something that made the world such a good place to be.

And so there is something here that makes Canterbury different (and the same) from other towns: it wasn't the shops, or the fashions, or the tangible material things that made this world a lovely place to be. It is the people. Small moments, little actions. Real people, real life.

Its worth writing about.

2 comments:

TinsMush said...

Great blog Mr Wylie...you factor out the most important thing about Canterbury, its people. There's something poetic about the way you write this piece.Love it!

Tinashe

Wylie said...

Thanks very much Tinashe!
I appreciate the praise from a good writer such as yourself.